| 
												
												Verses 2-7Ezekiel 6:2-7. Set thy face 
												toward the mountains of Israel — 
												Turn thy face to that part where 
												Judea is situated. Judea was a 
												hilly country; therefore that 
												whole land is expressed here and 
												elsewhere by the mountains of 
												Israel, Judah being called 
												Israel, because the ten tribes, 
												generally distinguished by that 
												name, had been long since 
												carried captive into Assyria, 
												and Judah possessed a great part 
												of their country. And prophesy 
												against them — Direct thy 
												discourse to them. The prophets 
												sometimes directed their 
												discourse to the inanimate parts 
												of the creation, thereby to 
												upbraid the stupidity of men. 
												Thus saith the Lord to the 
												mountains and to the hills — 
												Every part of the country had 
												been defiled with idolatry. The 
												altars built for idol-worship 
												were commonly placed upon 
												mountains and hills; the shady 
												valleys and river-sides were 
												likewise made use of for the 
												same purpose, particularly for 
												the sacrificing of children to 
												Moloch: see Isaiah 57:5; 
												Jeremiah 7:31. So by this the 
												prophet denounces a general 
												judgment upon the whole country. 
												And your altars shall be 
												desolate — See note on Leviticus 
												26:30, where Moses denounces 
												against the Israelites the same 
												judgments upon their 
												provocations. I will cast down 
												your slain men before your 
												idols, &c. — So that their sin 
												shall be read in the manner of 
												their punishment; and while the 
												idols are upbraided with their 
												inability to help their 
												worshippers, the idolaters are 
												reproached with the folly of 
												trusting in them. And ye shall 
												know that I am the Lord — “An 
												epiphonema, or conclusion of a 
												severe denunciation often 
												repeated by this prophet, 
												importing that the judgments 
												which God intended to bring on 
												the Jews, would make the most 
												hardened and stupid sinners 
												sensible that this was God’s 
												hand.” — Lowth.
 
 
 Verses 8-10
 Ezekiel 6:8-10. Yet will I leave 
												a remnant — “A gracious 
												exception that often occurs in 
												the prophets when they denounce 
												general judgments against the 
												Jews; implying that God will 
												still preserve a remnant of that 
												people; to whom he will fulfil 
												the promises made to their 
												fathers.” And they that escape 
												of you shall remember me, &c. — 
												Your afflictions shall bring you 
												to the knowledge of yourselves, 
												and a sense of your duty to me. 
												Because I am broken with their 
												whorish hearts — I am much 
												grieved, and my patience is 
												tired out with this people’s 
												idolatries, called in Scripture 
												spiritual whoredom. God is here 
												introduced as speaking after the 
												manner of men, whose patience is 
												tired out by the repeated 
												provocations of others, 
												especially when they see no 
												hopes of amendment. And with 
												their eyes go a whoring after 
												their idols — The eyes are the 
												seat of lascivious inclinations: 
												see 2 Peter 2:14. So, in pursuit 
												of the same metaphor, the eyes 
												are said to go a whoring after 
												idols, the people being often 
												tempted to idolatrous worship by 
												the costliness of the images, 
												and the fine show they made. And 
												they shall loathe themselves, 
												&c. — With a mixture of grief 
												toward God, of indignation 
												against themselves, and 
												abhorrence of the offence. And 
												they shall know I have not said 
												in vain, &c. — Without cause, as 
												the word חנם is more 
												significantly translated Ezekiel 
												14:22; the sufferers had given 
												him just cause to pronounce that 
												evil. Or, without effect: their 
												sins were the cause, and their 
												destruction is the effect of 
												their sufferings.
 
 Verses 11-14
 Ezekiel 6:11-14. Smite with thy 
												hand, and stamp with thy foot — 
												Join to thy words the gestures 
												which are proper to express 
												grief and concern at the 
												wickedness of thy people, and 
												for their calamities that will 
												ensue. For they shall fall by 
												the sword, &c. — See note on 
												Ezekiel 5:12. He that is far off 
												— And thinks himself out of 
												danger, because he is out of the 
												reach of the enemy; shall die of 
												the pestilence — The arrow that 
												I will shoot at him. And he that 
												is near — Who stays in his own 
												country, or who is near a place 
												of strength, which he hopes will 
												be to him a place of safety, yet 
												shall fall by the sword before 
												he can retreat to it. And he 
												that remaineth — Who is so 
												cautious as not to venture out, 
												but remains in the city; shall 
												die by the famine — The most 
												miserable death of all: thus 
												will I accomplish my fury — I 
												will satisfy my just 
												displeasure, and give them full 
												measure of punishment: I will do 
												all that against them which I 
												had purposed to do. Then shall 
												ye know — See note on Ezekiel 
												6:10. When their slain men shall 
												be among their idols — As was 
												threatened before, Ezekiel 
												6:5-7. Upon every high hill, &c. 
												— There, where they had 
												prostrated themselves in honour 
												of their idols, God will lay 
												them dead to their own reproach, 
												and the reproach of their idols: 
												they lived among them, and shall 
												die among them: they had offered 
												sweet odours to their idols, but 
												there shall their dead carcasses 
												send forth an offensive smell, 
												as it were, to atone for that 
												misplaced incense. So will I 
												stretch out my hand — Put forth 
												my almighty power; and make the 
												land desolate — שׁממה, a 
												desolation, a Hebraism, for most 
												desolate: that fruitful, 
												pleasant, populous country, 
												which has been as the garden of 
												Eden, the glory of all lands; 
												shall be more desolate than the 
												wilderness toward Diblath — Or 
												Diblathaim, as it is called 
												Numbers 33:46; the desert in the 
												borders of Moab, part of that 
												great and terrible wilderness, 
												described Deuteronomy 8:15.
 |